For her first major outing Little Voice, Sara Bareilles puts forth an intimate, emotionally charged album that sounds remarkably polished for a fledgling self-taught songwriter/performer. In fact, her voice even stands up to professionally trained pop divas like Christina Aguilera. Her only potential downfall is that she fits so perfectly in the adult contemporary female pianist mold that comparisons are inevitable -- Bareilles' vocal range is similar to Fiona Apple and she bears a striking physical resemblance to a merged composite of Vanessa Carlton and Michelle Branch. Despite the plethora of comparable looking and sounding artists, she still manages to stand out. The songs are sultry and generally upbeat, and delivered in a soulful manner with polished production and arrangement, but her X factor is in her ability to make it all sound unforced and very, very easy. Unquestionably, she's a natural with a huge voice and personality that shine through with spirited energy here. Perhaps the best and most original track is the ultra-peppy (think "Benny and the Jets") "Love on the Rocks" (not to be confused with the Neil Diamond number). With a warm wah-wah guitar and meandering Motown-esque harmonies, it makes for a perfect summertime love song. Undoubtedly her expertise is writing love songs like this, evident by song titles like "Love Song" and "One Sweet Love," but there are enough uniquely spun takes on the subject to make it interesting. In "Fairytale," children's stories are used as a metaphor for escapism and dealing with depression, and with the moody ballad "Gravity," falling in love is compared to getting caught in an inescapable gravitational pull. In the latter tearjerker of a tune, she shows off her chops with a song-stopping vocal crescendo, further proving that she has a style that's something special, even among all the stiff competition. ~ Jason Lymangrover, All Music Guide
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posted on Thu, 24 Apr 2008 09:32:11Not just another girl with a piano...
Sara Bareilles – Little Voice (Epic/Sony/BMG) - I thought my first contribution to this space would be some indie gem I just unearthed, but this morning my ears caught a major label offering that’s worthy of contemplation. The soulful, popster-ish Sara Bareilles swings in the same playground as Norah Jones, but less jazz-centric, or a less coldly methodical Tori Amos or Fiona Apple, following a lineage that proceeds from the playfulness of early Elton John to the boldness of a good Ben Folds offering (albeit not as eccentric, but then, who is?). And the voice is assured, gorgeously malleable, and with just enough grit to deliver the emotion her sentimental yet savvy lyric play invokes.
‘Love Song’, the lead-off track and radio opener, begins with a pounding, confident chord pattern on the piano that immediately perks ears ala the aforementioned Ben Folds, and Bareilles’ sultry, sexy throat seals the deal even before the dynamite hook in the chorus breaks the song wide open. ‘Vegas’ throttles along with the swagger of the titular city, ‘Bottle It Up’ is a catchy clarion call to young girls and their tentative love connections, and she foregoes her signature piano sound to open ‘One Sweet Love’ with some gentle acoustic guitar to pleasantly contrasting effect. She gets white r’n’b gutsy on ‘Morningside’, and tenderly reflective on ‘Between The Lines’ and 'City'. ‘Come Round Soon’ is a bubbling-under slow'n'soulful rocker while being a great spotlight for her vocal gymnastics and "Love on the Rocks' echoes the Elton John side of her musical equation with its 'Benny & The Jets' intro.
It's not all good news; 'Many The Miles' is sassy and swings nicely but loses points for its too familiar gospelesque chorus, and the elegant closer, ‘Gravity’, is burdened by an intrusive and sappy string section (the song is reworked from her first effort, an indie demo album from '04, and I'd hazard a guess that the original is probably superior to this version), but overall she acquits herself extremely well on this major label debut. (That series of demos and a live EP precede this release.)
Fortunately though for the most part, the typically glossy-major-label production values don’t overwhelm the sincerity and delicacy of the artist herself; the core acoustic piano sound is nicely miked and generally well positioned in the standard adult-oriented-rock mix, the backing is solidly groove-worthy and workmanlike, and there’s no evidence of the dreaded auto-tune in her stylishly unfettered voice. In point of fact, the sophistication of her songwriting suits the platform; she's worthy competition to similarly positioned 'girls with a piano' the likes of Universal's Vanessa Carlton and Capitol's Annie Stela. Oh, and she’s engagingly pretty, too, in an atypical, pleasant way that surely won’t hinder her chances in the video marketing department.
Maybe the major labels aren’t quite the dinosaurs the new digital/YouTube/MySpace indie explosion has made them out to be just yet; had she auditioned for that abysmal, contrived, American Idol crap, Surly Simon would have immediately recognized her natural superiority and sent everybody else packing after the first episode. (A one hour season; we can only dream….)
Tez Howes
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MR5xv3pt7KI
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posted on Wed, 16 Jan 2008 16:29:53All the rave...
Sara Bareilles has an amazing and surprising voice. She's sounds like a mix between Nora Jones and KT Tunstall. Some of her songs are mellow, others are empowering. Truly "Love Song" is an excellent track as well as "City." Buying this CD would not be a mistake, I promise!
Track Listing
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Credits
- Brian MacLeod
- Drums
- Stuart Mathis
- Guitar
- Billy Mims
- Assistant Engineer
- Jamie Muhoberac
- Piano
- Charles Paakkari
- Assistant Engineer
- Rafael Padilla
- Percussion
- Eric Rosse
- Mandolin, Programming, Mixing, Vocal Engineer, Overdub Engineer, Engineer, String Arrangements, Producer, Piano (Electric), Arranger, Percussion
- Bruce Watson
- Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar, Guitar (Electric)
- Howard Willing
- Engineer
- Lyle Workman
- Guitar
- Joel Shearer
- Guitar, Soloist
- Cameron Stone
- Cello
- Jake Davies
- Programming
- Chris Chaney
- Bass
- Sara Bareilles
- Guitar (Acoustic), Piano, Fender Rhodes, Vocals (Background)
- Pete Giberga
- A&R
- Jordan Feldstein
- Management
- Josh Day
- Vocals (Background)
- Dave Colvin
- Assistant Engineer
- Chris Joyner
- Piano
- Javier Dunn
- Vocals (Background)
- Matt Chamberlain
- Drums


















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